Citizen Science in Germany as Research and Sustainability Education: Analysis of the Main Forms and Foci and Its Relation to the Sustainable Development Goals
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Citizen Science as a Participatory Research Approach
2.1. Origin and Characteristics of Citizen Science
“[…] the engagement of people in scientific processes who are not tied to institutions in that field of science. Participation can range from the short-term collection of data to the intensive use of leisure time in order to delve deeper into a research topic together with scientists and/or other volunteers. Although many volunteer scientists do have a university degree, this is not a prerequisite for participating in research projects. However, it is important that scientific standards are adhered to. This pertains especially to transparency with regard to the data collection methodology and the open discussion of the results.”[23] (p. 13)
2.2. Types of Citizen Science and Forms of Participation
2.3. Aims of Citizen Science and Critical Reflection of the Approach
3. Citizen Science and Sustainable Development
4. Method and Sample for the Review of Citizen Science Projects
Category | Subcategory | Example |
---|---|---|
Overlap with, or intended effects on, SDGs | SDGs 1–17 | Attribution to an SDG does not mean that the SDG is explicitly mentioned, but that issues mentioned in this SDG are also mentioned as project goals. For example: SDG 4 Quality Education: research-based learning in the case of “KölnErforschen” [35] SDG 13 Climate Action: research on trees for cities in times of climate change in “TreeChecker” [36] SDG 15 Life on Land: collecting information on different neophyte species in “Erforsche Neophyten mit!” [37] |
Degree of involvement of the citizens [22] | Crowdsourcing | Distributed computing in “Seti.Germany” [38] |
Distributed intelligence | Animal observation and recording in “Stadtwildtiere Berlin” [39] | |
Participatory science | Joint development of research design, research question and data collection in “Patient Science - Patienten schaffen Wissen” [40] | |
Extreme citizen science | Research conducted independently by non-professional researchers as in “KölnErforschen” [41] | |
Type of research [34] | Fundamental research | Collecting information on insects in “Insektensommer” to produce scientific knowledge on insects [42] |
Applied research | Researching plastic waste on the coast to develop solutions for the global plastic waste problem in “Dem Plastikmüll auf der Spur” [43] | |
Openness in terms of the participants | Open—no required prior knowledge or assets | Anybody with a smartphone living in Europe can participate in “FotoQuest Go” [44] |
Closed—specific assets or knowledge required | Only people with bee colonies, up to three pollen traps, colour vision and internet access can participate in “C.S.I. Pollen” [45] | |
Target group for the scientific results | Narrow | Scientific results are only used by researchers in “Chimp&See” [46] |
Medium | Scientific results are available on the project homepage in “Citclops” [47] | |
Large | Scientific results are presented at an online conference and published on a website in the case of “Jetzt ist Zähltag!” [48] | |
Focus of the project | Research | Research results are the focus and are used for further scientific work in “Die Apfelblütenaktion” [49] |
Education | Students develop solutions to social, economic or ecological problems in “YES! Young Economic Summit”, with the aim of increasing their competencies [50] |
5. Results
5.1. Relation of the Citizen Science Projects to the SDGs
5.2. Sustainability Education and Scientific Results
5.3. Levels of Participation
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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SDG | Number of Associated Projects | |
---|---|---|
1 | No Poverty | 0 |
2 | Zero Hunger | 3 |
3 | Good Health and Well-being | 11 |
4 | Quality Education | 33 |
5 | Gender Equality | 1 |
6 | Clean Water and Sanitation | 1 |
7 | Affordable and Clean Energy | 0 |
8 | Decent Work and Economic Growth | 0 |
9 | Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure | 7 |
10 | Reduced Inequalities | 0 |
11 | Sustainable Cities and Communities | 10 |
12 | Responsible Consumption and Production | 5 |
13 | Climate Action | 21 |
14 | Life below Water | 7 |
15 | Life on Land | 48 |
16 | Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions | 0 |
17 | Partnerships for the Goals | 1 |
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Schleicher, K.; Schmidt, C. Citizen Science in Germany as Research and Sustainability Education: Analysis of the Main Forms and Foci and Its Relation to the Sustainable Development Goals. Sustainability 2020, 12, 6044. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12156044
Schleicher K, Schmidt C. Citizen Science in Germany as Research and Sustainability Education: Analysis of the Main Forms and Foci and Its Relation to the Sustainable Development Goals. Sustainability. 2020; 12(15):6044. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12156044
Chicago/Turabian StyleSchleicher, Katharina, and Constanze Schmidt. 2020. "Citizen Science in Germany as Research and Sustainability Education: Analysis of the Main Forms and Foci and Its Relation to the Sustainable Development Goals" Sustainability 12, no. 15: 6044. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12156044